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Capturing the Moment of Fusion Loss in Intermittent Exotropia
Published Web Location
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0161642016315263No data is associated with this publication.
Abstract
Purpose
To characterize eye movements made by patients with intermittent exotropia when fusion loss occurs spontaneously and to compare them with those induced by covering 1 eye and with strategies used to recover fusion.Design
Prospective study of a patient cohort referred to our laboratory.Participants
Thirteen patients with typical findings of intermittent exotropia who experienced frequent spontaneous loss of fusion.Methods
The position of each eye was recorded with a video eye tracker under infrared illumination while fixating on a small central near target.Main outcome measures
Eye position and peak velocity measured during spontaneous loss of fusion, shutter-induced loss of fusion, and recovery of fusion.Results
In 10 of 13 subjects, the eye movement made after spontaneous loss of fusion was indistinguishable from that induced by covering 1 eye. It reached 90% of full amplitude in a mean of 1.75 seconds. Peak velocity of the deviating eye's movement was highly correlated for spontaneous and shutter-induced events. Peak velocity was also proportional to exotropia amplitude. Recovery of fusion was more rapid than loss of fusion, and often was accompanied by interjection of a disconjugate saccade.Conclusions
Loss of fusion in intermittent exotropia is not influenced by visual feedback. Excessive divergence tone may be responsible, but breakdown of alignment occurs via a unique, pathological type of eye movement that differs from a normal, physiological divergence eye movement.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.